Frozen Mint Chocolate Swirl

Just a quick and fun little recipe to use up those avocados on your counter.

Yep, avocados.

In vegan ice cream!

Creamy, delicious and good for you.. what more can a girl ask for??

(PS – can you spot my newest cookbook addition sitting on top of my beloved Veganomicon??)

Frozen Mint Chocolate Swirl
2 ripe avocados
1 cup almond milk
1/2 cup sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon pure mint extract

In a blender, puree all ingredients until smooth. Chill overnight and freeze in your ice cream maker. Once the ice cream is finished, but before you stop the machine, drizzle in chocolate. You could melt some chocolate chips with a bit of oil or mix up some quick “syrup” out of cocoa powder, sugar, canola oil and a bit of water.

If you aren’t devouring it immediately, make sure you let it sit at room temp for about 5 minutes before you try to scoop it!

Eat your Oats!

Short post today. Supershort.

Let me just say that vegan overnight oat parfaits are perfection.

Oh yes, perfection.

Whether it’s your first attempt (chocolate) and it’s too liquidy..

Or your second attempt and it’s just right..

This Goldielocks is one happy camper!

All thanks to Angela over at Oh She Glows.

Happy Easter, everyone!

Blueberry Lime “Cheesecake” with a Kick

The internet connection I was getting in my house is now completely inactive.

That sucks.

Of course that’s what I get for not setting up my own internet connection.

So now I’m sitting at Starbucks, sipping on a sparkling water (my first time drinking this San Pellegrino stuff) and kicking myself for forgetting to download the pics of my newest bake from this morning!

Another time, another post I guess!

With the temperatures reaching the mid 70s yesterday, I was itching to spend the day outside. When I got home from work, Kyle surprised me with some yummy wraps for a picnic lunch. He roasted his own red peppers, caramelized some onions and placed them on top of a nice soft green onion tortilla with a layer of red pepper hummus and some romaine! He’s so sweet sometimes. ;)

We packed up those wraps with some extra snackables I had in the pantry and headed out to the park to soak up some sunshine. Leave it to me to soak up too much and burn myself.

Darn my fair skin.

Lunch was DELISH!

Afterward we wandered around outside the strip malls to soak up some more sunshine in small doses. We would have preferred to play frisbee, but the ground was SOAKED from 2 straight days of rain. Sadness.

After a while we started to feel peckish again.

Kyle offered to take me to my absolute favorite restaurant in this town, La Villetta. I was ecstatic! This place is the only place in town I’ve found that is super vegan-friendly. However odd my request may seem, they always get it right. And get it right with a smile.

I left the camera in the car and was too excited to take photos with my phone. I just wanted to enjoy our meal. I know, bad blogger!

We started with a free bruschetta appetizer (it’s customer appreciation month after all) and their yummy fresh bread. Kyle decided to get the endless soup, salad and breadsticks. I decided on pasta. The part I was most excited about: the marinara sauce. I have an obsession.

I. Love. Marinara.

I had fettucini cooked in olive oil with tons of fresh sauteed veggies. Carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, mushrooms, onions and jalapenos all made it into the pool. Along with some garlic and oil. The marinara came on the side.

I have to say I was SO impressed with this that I will request it the next time we go in.

If you’re ever in the area and decide to go to La Villetta, be sure to ask for Melissa. She was the best server I’ve had in a long time (they’re all good but she was fantastic!)

After stuffing ourselves silly, we decided to walk some of that off by stopping at Walmart to pick up Season 5 of CSI. WOO HOO!

We hurried home to watch.

And make tarts.

This raw tart idea came from Vegan Culinary Crusade. I’ve been seriously drooling over this tart for almost 3 days and finally decided to make it. Kyle did deserve a yummy dessert after all his hard work from making lunch and taking me out to a fantasmic meal!

Boy was this thing worth the effort I put into it. I don’t think the filling whipped up as well as Lisa’s but it was tasty! To me it tasted just like cheesecake filling, but better! And way more nutritious!

Blueberry Lime “Cheesecake” with a Kick (adapted from Vegan Culinary Crusade)
1 cup raw walnuts
4 dates, pitted
pinch of salt

1 cup raw cashews, soaked for 2 hours
3 dates, pitted
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
3 tablespoons non dairy milk (I used soy milk, but you could use raw homemade milk to keep it completely raw)
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

Fresh blueberries (or strawberries) to top

In a food processor, pulse the walnuts, dates and salt until fully combined and formable. Press the crust mixture into tart tins, little souffle cups, shot glasses, whatever you’ve got that’s tiny and cute. Make sure to press up into the sides a bit so you can see the beautiful crust after you put the topping on. I got about 3 small tarts and a shot glass tart out of this recipe. Plus I had some filling leftover (which I used in my chickpea bake this morning..) Place the containers in the freezer while you make the filling.

Without rinsing the food processor, toss in the cashews, dates and cayenne and let ‘er rip. While the processor is on, add in the lime juice and milk, one tablespoon at a time, until the mixture comes together. It will look like a thick cream cheese mixture. I think mine took about 10 minutes.

Remove the tart shells from the freezer and fill them with that yummy cashew filling. Even out the tops of your filling a bit and place back in the freezer for about 30 minutes.

When you’re ready to chow, remove from the freezer, top with blueberries or strawberries and allow to sit for about 5 minutes.

You will enjoy this.

I guarantee it.

Check out Vegan Culinary Crusade. This woman is amazing and has fantastic recipes. I have so many of them bookmarked already and she just keeps adding more. I can’t wait to conquer another one!

Belated Birthday Celebration!

My dad’s birthday was Valentine’s Day but I didn’t get to celebrate with him that night. Our schedules are so conflicting! So I made a deal. I would cook him a feast in celebration! And it would be one that I could partake in as well!

I created another menu, much like I did for my Annivalentinese New Year celebration. This time the theme was Italian! I desperately wanted to use Ashley’s kale pesto recipe, so I based the whole rest of the meal off of that.

The menu went:
Throw-together salad of yummy veggies from the parents’ fridge (this was a last minute addition)
Pesto Lasagna with shitake mushrooms and artichoke hearts
Meat(less)balls topped with roasted red pepper sauce
Spearmint Chocolate Chip ice cream

Since the salad was a last minute addition and I didn’t measure, so I’ll start with the lasagna!

Influenced by the kale pesto I mentioned earlier, I created this unique lasagna. I whipped up the recipe for tofu ricotta I found over at (never home)maker and was blown away by the result. My mom couldn’t stop raving about how much she loved it (despite being a self proclaimed tofu hater) and how she could taste all the flavors in the pesto!

I altered Ashley’s pesto recipe the slightest bit, using only walnuts and reducing the nutritional yeast to 3 tablespoons. I also found that the consistency I wanted used 10 tablespoons of the cooking liquid. I followed the ricotta recipe to the letter.

Pesto Lasagna
1 batch pesto
1 batch tofu ricotta
1/2 package lasagna noodles
1 can artichoke hearts, rinsed well, diced
1 ounce dried oyster mushrooms, rehydrated, towel dried (reserving liquid) and diced
1/4 cup mushroom soaking water

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a large pot, boil some water for the lasagna noodles. Now, the idea to do roll ups came to me AFTER I had already broken the noodles in half and cooked them until they were extremely al dente. So if you aren’t going for the miniature lasagna look and want something really fancy, leave them whole and roll them individually instead of making it casserole style!

Anyhow once the noodles are cooked, strain, rinse and lay them out on paper towels to await their next stage. In the same pot you cooked the noodles in, heat a bit of olive oil over medium heat. Once hot, toss in mushrooms and artichoke hearts, seasoning with a pinch of salt and fresh ground pepper. Cook until the mushrooms and artichokes get a nice beginning caramelization on them and become really fragrant. Remove from heat and set aside.

Grease a 8×8 inch casserole dish with olive oil. Start with a layer of noodles and spread about 1/3 of the pesto on top. Using your hands, crumble about 1/3 of the tofu mixture on top of the pesto and cover that with 1/3 of the mushroom mixture. Repeat these layers until you’re out of either space or mixtures! Slowly pour mushroom water into the dish, being careful not to disturb your beautiful layers.

Cover the casserole dish with aluminum foil and bake 40-45 minutes. The edges will start to brown just a bit before it’s completely done!

Onto the meat(less)balls and sauce!

I was SO proud of both meat(less)balls and sauce! I roasted my own red pepper over the stovetop, even! I’ll be making this sauce again and again.. it was that scrumptious! I couldn’t stop eating it with a spoon..

Roasted Red Pepper Marinara
1 roasted red pepper, chopped
10 sun-dried tomatoes, rehydrated and chopped (reserve soaking liquid)
1 small onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 141/2 oz can diced tomatoes in sauce (unseasoned)
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon pomegranate balsalmic vinegar
pinch salt
cracked black pepper

Combine all ingredients in a large pot, cover and cook over medium/low heat for about 30 minutes or until the onions start to break down. Cool completely and refrigerate overnight. Pulse sauce in a food processor a few times to break down the sauce a bit more and stick it back in the refrigerator until you’re ready to serve. I ended up pouring mine over the meat(less)balls and baking them, uncovered, about 40-45 minutes alongside the lasagna.

Meat(less)balls
2 cups TVP
1 1/3 cup boiling water (I used the sun-dried tomato soaking water heated to boiling)
1 onion, minced
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 cup rolled oats
1 tablespoon vital wheat gluten
2 tablespoons nutritional yeast
3 teaspoons italian herb blend
2 flax eggs
2 tablespoons olive oil
salt
freshly cracked pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. I baked these beforehand and re-baked them under the sauce since I made them ahead of time. Alternatively you could just serve these straight out of the oven and heat the sauce on the stove.

Rehydrate the TVP with the boiling water and allow it to sit for 10 minutes. Add in onion, garlic, nutritional yeast, herbs, flax eggs and olive oil. Combine well and stir in oats, wheat gluten, salt and pepper. Lightly grease a cookie sheet and form mixture into balls slightly smaller than the size of ping pong balls. Bake 20 minutes or until the balls feel firm to the touch. At this point they should be a bit brown on the bottom as well. Serve immediately or cool and store until you’re ready to dine!

My dad enjoyed his meal, too, after getting past the (understandably) strange idea of meatballs sans meat. We all had a second helping, even!

Dinner was followed by ice cream!

Sorry for the blurriness, I was too excited!

I was inspired by Koko’s Kitchen. On a whim I decided to use the dried spearmint leaves I had in my cabinet instead of the peppermint leaves, giving it a whole different flavor. It went over very well!

Spearmint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream (adapted from Koko’s Kitchen)
Scant 1/4 cup dried spearmint leaves
1/2 cup plus 1/3 cup water
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons brown rice syrup
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk
1/4 cup PACKED kale, destemmed
1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste
pinch salt
1 ounce bittersweet vegan chocolate

Heat 1/2 cup water, spearmint leaves and brown rice syrup until the mixture boils. Lower heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat and let it sit for 10 minutes.

In a blender, puree milk, 1/3 cup water, kale, vanilla bean paste and salt. Add in spearmint syrup and puree again. Strain mixture into a large bowl and refrigerate overnight. The next day, strain the mixture again before pouring into the ice cream maker. Freeze according to manufacturer’s instructions. Just before the mixture finishes, melt the chocolate in the microwave. Pour half of the ice cream into storage container and pour half the chocolate on top of that. Mix these together until the chocolate is well mixed and starting to be.. chocolate bitty. Top with remaining ice cream and remaining chocolate, stirring again. Lid that bad boy and freeze until ready to serve.

I was very happy with how this meal came out. If you’ve got some time on your hands and are up for experimentation, give these meatballs a shot! The texture really is great for having no meat in them! Next time I think I’ll go with a hefty dose of crushed red pepper and cayenne!

Enjoy your evening! It’s off to bed with me!

Blueberry bliss in a bowl..

Even though it is 15 degrees outside (before wind chill, mind you) around here, I’ve been craving ice cream like its going out of style.

Unfortunately the past few attempts to make ice cream failed miserably. I think I can deduce from these disasters that oat milk is NOT a good substitute for regular milk when it comes to making ice cream. I’ve been trying to make do with making oat milk out of my rolled oats to save money. It works great for making cheese sauce, hot chocolate and, well, oatmeal. However I splurged this week (with a dollar off coupon) and bought myself a gallon of real milk! Having my secret weapon in hand, I scoured the internet for a relatively healthy, yet still unique, ice cream recipe.

Oh did I find a beauty. Are you ready?

Over at Susi’s Kochen Und Backen Adventures I found a recipe for blueberries and cream ice cream. I made the recipe according to her instructions, only I cut it in half, used frozen blueberries and skim milk. Oh the beautiful blueberriness that you taste with each mouthful..

I highly recommend this recipe as well as some of the other yummy frozen treats Susi has on her site!

Vanillumpkin Bean Ice Cream

Pumpkin-y Goodness to the EXTREME!

Yeah.  I’m crazy like that.  See, I’ve been making a few batches of ice cream a week, trying to find the perfect combination that is light in calories, tastes great and doesn’t turn rock hard in the freezer.  I’ve done it.

I was asked to bring dessert to my Aunt’s Thanksgiving feast this year (and also told I was in charge of cleaning and stuffing the turkey.  For her whole family.  Nerves will get the best of me yet)

She’s making upside-down apple pie.  Mmm.. apple pie.  Love it.  I couldn’t think of something I really wanted to go with the apple pie.  I didn’t want to compete with it by making another huge dessert and no one really eats the pumpkin pie.  I’m just not fond of the flavor combos myself.  But I wanted pumpkin something.  I had some shiny new vanilla bean paste my mom’s friend grabbed for me from a spice store in Chicago and decided to create a hybrid of my favorite flavor, vanilla bean, with a spectacular fall flavor, pumpkin – thus creating the vanillumpkin bean masterpiece!

I was SO incredibly proud of myself for this recipe.  I created it myself.  And it worked.  So proud.

The taste?  Unbelievable.  Its really hard to restrain myself knowing that little batch is sitting in there.  Its one of those ice creams that you HAVE to take a spoonful every time you walk by the freezer.

Kyle loves it, too.  Man, I can’t wait until Thanksgiving (I’ll have to double or even triple the batch) to see how its received.  Yum, yum, YUM!

Enjoy =)

Vanillumpkin Bean Ice Cream
1 cup skim milk
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup sugar (I used white but I don’t see why brown wouldn’t be just as delicious here)
1 egg, beaten
3/4 cup pumpkin puree
1/2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste
1/8 teaspoon sea salt (I forgot this in this recipe and it still tasted great)
1 1/2 teaspoons liquor (I used whiskey, its really just to keep it from getting rock solid)

In a pot, scald the milk and cream, being sure not to let it boil. You don’t want that skin on there. Yuck! Once the milk is scalded, remove the pan from the heat and stir in the sugar until its well dissolved. Cool slightly, until you can leave your finger in there without burning it. Slowly pour the milk mixture over the beaten egg, whisking constantly. Cook the custard in a double boiler over medium heat (or a wok set on top of your largest pan in my case), still whisking constantly, until its thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Remove the custard from the heat and beat in the pumpkin and vanilla bean paste.

Chill overnight to combine all the lovely flavors.

You’d add the salt here if you didn’t forget about it. Churn the custard according to the manufacturer’s instructions (mine only took about 15 minutes), adding the liquor just before the ice cream is finished churning. Store in an airtight container in the freezer. I need to look into getting those little ice cream cartons if I’m gonna keep making ice cream..

I’m in love…

.. with my ice cream maker.

I think he needs a name. He’s been such a good little guy this week! And you know what? Tonight he’s outdone himself.

Ooooooooh!

You see, I had this butternut squash sitting on the counter from the farmer’s market. Oh how I love the farmer’s market. A plethora of delicious veggies and such for super cheap. Ahhhh it’s heaven to me. Well the squash was roasted up last night in preparation of.. well.. eating! But I wanted to be sure to save enough to make some ice cream.

Yes, butternut squash ice cream. Oh my you have never tasted such ice cream.  Just look at that beautiful color and those teeny spice specks!

I decided to spin up my own little recipe instead of following one. I bought half and half JUST for this reason. I also bought canned peaches JUST for this reason. Oooooh you just have to taste it for yourself. Mmm.. mmm.. mmm…

Maybe serve it over some frozen blueberries?  Or sprinkled with chocolate shavings..

Now I have to go deal with Ralph. He keeps trying to come in here. What the hell do you do with a ballsy Ralph??

(photo courtesy of Google and is NOT actually Ralph)

He simply canNOT live in my house. No way, Mister.

Appetizing, no?

Butternut-Peach Ice Cream
1 cup pureed butternut squash (pumpkin would work wonderfully here, too)
1 14 1/2 ounce can peaches, drained, rinsed and pureed in a food processor
1 cup half and half
1/2 cup water
2 tablespoons honey
1/2 teaspoon garam masala (you could use plain cinnamon here, too)
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

Combine all ingredients and whisk together until smooth. If needed, refrigerate until chilled (everything I’d used had been in the fridge except the peaches and the honey so I didn’t need to stick it in the fridge) and freeze according to manufacturer’s instructions. My ice cream maker took about 30-40 minutes to get a nice, thick consistency.

Too-chocolatey-for-words sorbet

Speechless?

I tried.  I couldn’t think of the right way to describe this decadent chocolate sorbet I made with my brand new ice cream maker!

I picked this bad boy up at Sears for $40! I was so happy! I’ve been waiting to have an ice cream maker since the beginning of this year and I finally took the plunge! Now I can finally get all these crazy ice cream/frozen yogurt ideas out of my head!

My first thought was to do a watermelon basil sorbet. Of course, after a long morning of internet searches, I settled on a recipe from Smitten Kitchen for chocolate sorbet. Yeah, just looking at that title just changed my mind like that!

Well I decided to change it up just a bit since I like my chocolate darker and more bitter than most. This was still plenty sweet and oh-so-rich. Chocolatey heaven in a bowl. I could have let the ice cream maker run a bit longer but I was too impatient to wait!

A weakness. Oh well!

Chocolate Basil Sorbet
1 cup skim milk
1 cup water
3/4 cup special dark cocoa powder
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon fresh basil, finely chopped
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon almond flour
1 cup broken graham crackers, optional (I used my homemade graham crackers)

In a large saucepan, whisk together milk and half the water, sugar, salt, cocoa powder and basil. Bring to a low boil, whisking constantly. Remove from heat and whisk in chopped chocolate, extract, honey, flour and remaining water until smooth. Pour mixture into another container and chill until thoroughly cooled. Freeze in ice cream maker according to manufacturer’s instructions. A few minutes before the sorbet is finished, add graham crackers. Then try not to devour the whole recipe. ;)

Update:  The leftover sorbet firms up pretty nice in the freezer!  At least I can’t dig into it so easily now that its more solid!